My husband died in a rainy-night crash, leaving me to raise our sick son alone. But weeks later, a single text from his number — just one word, “Hi” — shattered everything I thought I knew about grief, truth, and the man I once loved.
Life had already backed me into a corner.
My son, Caleb, was only five when the doctor said those awful words — “It’s rare, but treatable. Expensive, though.”
I remember holding his tiny hand while trying not to cry in front of him.
After that day, everything became about medicine, bills, and hours.
I picked up every shift I could find. Morning job at the diner. Evening job cleaning offices.
Most days, I was so tired I forgot my own name. But I kept going. Because moms don’t get to stop.
Mark, my husband, worked just as hard.
Maybe harder. He took jobs three towns away, sometimes more.
Gone days at a time, chasing money we never seemed to catch.
I missed him, but I understood. We were just trying to survive.
And then—he didn’t come home.
They said it happened on a rainy highway.
The truck hit a patch of oil, spun off the road, flipped twice.
They told me he died fast.
That’s supposed to be a comfort, I guess.
It wasn’t.
I had to tell Caleb that Daddy wouldn’t be coming back. But he didn’t believe me.
Every day he’d ask, “When is Daddy coming home?”
What do you say to a child who keeps looking at the door, hoping it will open?
The days turned into weeks. Then months. I stopped counting.
I moved through life like I was underwater — heavy, slow, quiet. I cooked.
I worked.
I cried in the shower.
Then, one night, I came home after my second shift.
My back hurt. My shoes were soaked from the rain.
I tossed my bag on the couch, checked my phone.
A missed call from Mom.
A few work texts.
And then—one message stood out. My breath hitched.
It was from Mark.
Just one word.
“Hi.”
I dropped the phone like it had burned me.
My heart pounded in my ears.
I stared at the screen, afraid to pick it back up.
When I finally did, my fingers shook as I typed:
“I don’t know who you are or why you’re doing this, but the man who owned this phone is dead.”
The reply came fast.
“No.”
No?
No what?
I stood frozen in the middle of my living room. My stomach twisted. I typed again:
“This is cruel.
Pretending to be someone who’s gone? That’s sick.”
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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